Moderator: Dictators in Training
Tossica wrote: If you run a small business and can't possibly afford to pay your employees a living wage, you have a shitty business plan.
The average hedge fund rose 3% in 2014. Annualized returns have been 6.97% for the past five years 5.1% for the past 10 years, as reported by The Wall Street Journal.
Now compare that to a plain vanilla index fund, such as Vanguard 500 Index (MUTF:VFINX), which rose 13.5% in 2014 and averages 16% annualized for the past five years and 8% for each of the past 10 years.
To be fair, stocks have had an unusually strong 5-year run, and hedge funds are diversified to the degree that matching a 100% stock portfolio is not to be expected in such an environment.
So let’s be a bit fairer and compare one of the best and most boring of Vanguard balanced funds, Vanguard Balanced Index (MUTF:VBINX), with hedge fund performance.
In 2014, VBINX was up 9.8%, compared to the average hedge fund’s performance of just 3%. To capture a broader time period and a full market cycle in a comparison, the Vanguard Balance Index fund’s 10-year annualized return is 7.3%, compared to 5.1% for hedge funds. A simple, low-cost balance of roughly 60% stocks and 40% bonds beats hedge funds!
according to a Vanguard study on hedge funds during the Great Recession, where stocks took a nosedive from November 2007 through February 2009, a portfolio of 60% stocks and 40% bonds had a monthly return of -2.3%, whereas a fund of hedge funds index had a monthly return of -1.6%. That’s not much of a difference in volatility reduction for the added cost of hedge funds.
Lyion wrote:Tossica wrote: If you run a small business and can't possibly afford to pay your employees a living wage, you have a shitty business plan.
Business is all about value and wise management. Most fail due to competition, but many can't compete with larger entities not due to product, but due to regulations, taxes, and property costs. Many can't afford to pay their workers 40k or afford very expensive benefits. People who want more taxes, higher minimum wage, and more regulations are killing jobs, not creating them. We end up with more larger companies with less opportunity and generally less opportunity to make money. This is why so many people end up paying undocumented workers under the table.
Tossica wrote:Give more money to the middle class and they will create profits for the rich AND create more jobs with purchasing power and demand for products and services. EVERYONE WINS.
Lyion wrote:Arlos, All funds, hedge or standard charge an asset management fee. It's a boondoggle, but far less so than lawyers fees, doctors gouging the government, and 401ks. Most hedge funds are generally making money or they crater. They are different from mutuals in they are not regulated and can be more about strategic targetted investing. Plus, they are not mandatory like said 401ks for most of us. Besides, how else would Chelsea get rich so quick after leaving Bill and Hillary without using one of their funding sources?
Tossica wrote:Give more money to the middle class and they will create profits for the rich AND create more jobs with purchasing power and demand for products and services. EVERYONE WINS.
Lyion wrote:Psst, that's the entire Republican Agenda i.e. tax cuts and less government.
Lyion wrote:Tossica wrote:Give more money to the middle class and they will create profits for the rich AND create more jobs with purchasing power and demand for products and services. EVERYONE WINS.
Psst, that's the entire Republican Agenda i.e. tax cuts and less government. Welcome to the other side. I knew you'd move to the right when you got older!
Raising or lowering taxes generally never impacts the rich. The only way we could really change things is to torpedo the tax code and make it more fair.
Lyion wrote:Here I thought I was making such good progress at turning you all on to the GOP, and especially their libertarian wing.
leah wrote:i am forever grateful to my gym teacher for drilling that skill into me during drivers' ed
leah wrote:isn't the only difference the length? i feel like it would take too long to smoke something that long, ha.
Tossica wrote:I don't see how many people could have a problem with a government that spends tax money on health care, education, infrastructure, military, etc. Things that benefit EVERYONE. Stays out of everyone's personal lives and is made up of representatives that WE THE PEOPLE ACTUALLY WANT IN OFFICE. Not those with the biggest checkbooks and the most powerful lobbyists on their side..
Arlos wrote:Actually, I DO deny it. Look at the history of minimum wage hikes. Prices have NOT gone up in lockstep with the wage increases. It simply has not happened. Ever. Yeah, that's what generic economic theory says will happen, but it does NOT happen that way in real life. Seriously, the data is out there, go look it up, I'm not going to google it for you.
Lyion wrote:I don't have a problem with smart government. Ours is anything but, with rampant waste, corruption, bureaucracy, and cronyism. Medicare wastes billions. Education is almost a pyramid scheme. Military contracts are a huge boondoggle. Infrastructure should be pushed to the states and we shouldn't be paying for executives in DC responsible for repairing roads If they take more of my money they'll waste it. We are getting record levels of taxes and all they want is more. Fuck Federalism and those who want the government to take more of my check. It's skinned enough already. Properly budget the 3+ Trillion they are getting now, and do the fucking job.
Lyion wrote:I'm not quite following you, Toss. Bernie is pretty much the opposite of a libertarian. He's for big government, more spending, more control, socialized medicine, and against free trade and free markets. Heck, he's not even openly opposed to the war on drugs, as he says it's not a big deal, which is the biggie for GOP libertarian types.
I believe most self defined libertarians fall in the area of being for social liberalism but also strongly for fiscal conservatism. Bernie is as far from a fiscal conservative as possible and I don't see him getting much Libertarian support. Just the Bill Maher completely fake libertarians.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests